For too long, artists have been told that they can't have both motherhood and a successful career. In this polemical volume, critic and campaigner Hettie Judah argues that a paradigm shift is needed within the art world to take account of the needs of artist mothers (and other parents: artist fathers, parents who don't identify with the term 'mother', and parents in other sectors of the art world).
Drawing on interviews with artists internationally, the book highlights some of the success stories that offer models for the future, from alternative support networks and residency models, to studio complexes with onsite childcare, and galleries with family-friendly policies.
Some artists have described motherhood as providing them with renewed focus, a new direction in their work, and even inspiration for a complete change of career. Other artists choose to keep their domestic and creative lives compartmentalised. All are placed at a disadvantage by the art world as it is currently structured. This book argues that by making changes and becoming more sensitive to the needs of artist parents, the art world has much to gain.
Published by Lund Humphries Hardcover 104 pages 130 x 200 mm ISBN 9781848226128
Poetry Ireland Review is a journal of poetry. Published three times a year, the Review includes the work of both emerging and established Irish and international poets, essayists, critics and...
Eva Vitkute is a Dublin-based multidisciplinary creative whose grungy, textural visuals draw from alternative subcultures and personal memories. Her work has been featured in independent publications, created graphics for bands,...
An investigation into the beauty, joy and validation that comes from everyday food. Billy Woods is a Belfast-based photographer and art director with a focus on documentary work, as well...
Remnant was published to accompany an exhibition of the same name by Willie Doherty at Solstice Arts Centre in April 2024. The exhibition was reconfigured for Matt’s Gallery in October...
Designed with Oonagh Young, this publication features work exhibited in Nolan’s comprehensive 2021 exhibition A delicate bond which is also a gap at Solstice, and a body of work which followed on...
'BITS Magazine' is a joint collaboration between partners Marl and Isla, who set out to create an illustration magazine with puzzles, games and activities, reminiscent of the magazines we had...
'Ties That Bind – Fictions, Orthodoxies and Interdependencies' is an anthology that rethinks attachment and social power relations within family, state, friendship, identities and communities through passion, intoxication, exhaustion, desire,...
Sharon Slater is Historian-in-Residence at Ormston House. She has been researching the history of life in Limerick for over twenty years, and holds an MA in Local History from...